We've been using a blog for a while. We also have a facebook page and have just 
signed on to Twitter. We are "stuck" with the city's format for web design, so 
the social media options give us some flexibility. Also, we have video on 
YouTube and pics on Flickr. We'll be changing our website, adding a "social 
media" section to the front page.

Dale

Dale Ricklefs, Library Director
Round Rock Public Library
216 E. Main Street, Round Rock, Texas 78664
512-218-7010; 218-7061 (fax); [email protected]

Go to Facebook, and become a fan of Round Rock Public Library
Visit our website at: http://www.roundrocktexas.gov/library
--------------------------------------------------------------
If you get a "mailbox full" or some form of message identifying delivery 
problems, please call me at one of the numbers above. Thank you!

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Holly Gordon
Sent: Monday, October 12, 2009 3:12 PM
To: Liz Ackert; [email protected]
Subject: [ctls-l] Blogs, was Plinkit -- Plone vs. Drupal

Schulenburg Public Library is using a blog
http://www.schulenburgpubliclibrary.org

as is Liberty hill (in conjunction with their Plinkit site) http://lhpl.org

________________________________
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Liz Ackert
Sent: Friday, October 09, 2009 4:57 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ctls-l] Plinkit -- Plone vs. Drupal
I'd be interested in knowing how many libraries are considering switching over 
to a blog format ... or have already done so ... either in addition to or 
instead of a website.

Liz Ackert, CTLS Lay Representative
Wimberley Village Library
----- Original Message -----
From: Robert L. Williams<mailto:[email protected]>
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, October 09, 2009 4:39 PM
Subject: Re: [ctls-l] Plinkit -- Plone vs. Drupal

Hi, Holly and All:

And, at the risk of adding more glaze to the eyes, I wanted to add another $.02 
about Doug Robinson's hosting comment--which applies equally to Drupal, Joomla, 
and WordPress-and for non-technical library staff I'd recommend Joomla and 
WordPress over Drupal. While libraries can pay about $50/month for 
Drupal/Joomla hosting, it's usually much cheaper. Even if you pay the hosting 
provider for time to setup software and help with questions about your site, 
the cost is more like $25/mo and up. If someone will do the basic 
software/template setup for you, the ongoing cost for simple hosting is about 
$5-10/mo. Registering a domain name (like samplelibrary.org) usually costs as 
little as $10 per year. The simple hosting package will also include e-mail 
addresses that can be set up on the domain (e.g., 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> or 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>). Not having 
easy access e-mail for a domain is generally one of the downsides to the 
statewide projects (Plinkit, My Kansas Library on the Web, e-Branch-in-a-box 
(Idaho), etc.).

--Robert

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Holly Gordon
Sent: Friday, October 09, 2009 1:26 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ctls-l] Plinkit -- Plone vs. Drupal

People who were at the Gates Summit may remember that Doug Robinson, from the 
National Assoc. of State Chief Information Officers, mentioned that libraries 
could easily set up their own websites using Drupal (Content Management System) 
and webhosting (about $50/month)

Henry Stokes quickly reminded everyone that public libraries in Texas can use 
Plinkit (based on Plone), which the Texas State Library is hosting for free.    
So it is even easier to set up and maintain library websites in Texas -- 
contact me or Kam McEvoy if you would like to get started, or re-started with 
your own Plinkit web site.

At the risk of causing your eyes to glaze over due to too much techno-jargon, 
here is a bit about why Plone (the CMS software under Plinkit) is better for 
the content provider (aka the library staff) that Drupal.

Holly Gordon
Technical Support & Network Systems Specialist
Central Texas Library System, Inc.
1005 West 41st Street, Suite 100
Austin, TX 78756
512-583-0704 ext.15
www.ctls.net<http://www.ctls.net/>

________________________________
From: Tom Ceresini [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, October 09, 2009 10:11 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Plone vs. Drupal
Here is my recent response to the question, "Why Plone and not Drupal?":

I don't have direct knowledge of Drupal, although I understand that it's a very 
good open source CMS.  I have heard a description that I think speaks directly 
to this question:  Drupal is relatively easy to deploy at an administrative 
level, at a cost of being comparatively difficult to use from the perspective 
of the content provider (i.e., the "power user" of the system).  Plone (the CMS 
on which Plinkit is built) is relatively more difficult at an administrative 
level, but is simpler to use for the content provider.  For a single site, 
Drupal would likely be the best fit - it's easier to implement, and the 
admin/content providers are either the same person or close to one another.   
The more sites you try to support, the more the equation shifts to accepting 
more complexity on the admin side for the considerable benefit of greater 
simplicity on the content provider side.  In the case of Plinkit, the libraries 
will be almost purely content providers, and we'll be the admins.  We can learn 
the systems well and handle the complexity, and increasing the ease of use at 
the library end means fewer support calls and end-user frustration.

Having said that, I hope it's clear that I'm not dismissing Drupal (or Joomla, 
a similar open source CMS).  If I were building a CMS-based system for which an 
individual customer would serve as both system administrator (i.e., a 
non-hosted service) and content provider, I might well choose Drupal over 
Plone.  As a general rule, and based on what I've learned so far, I would tend 
toward Plone as a system grew larger or more complex.

I'll be curious to see other opinions.

Best regards,

Tom



TOM CERESINI

Library Technology Coordinator
LYRASIS

[email protected]

3000 Market Street, Suite 200

Philadelphia, PA 19104

D 267-385-3113

T 800.233.3401

F 215.382.0022

www.lyrasis.org<http://www.lyrasis.org>

NELINET is now part of LYRASIS, Advancing Libraries Together



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